Whose technology inspired Jules Verne’s conceptualization of the Nautilus? It was this guy’s, Spanish inventor and physicist Narcís Monturiol with his submarines Ictineo I and II. His series of submarines were the first successful working subs, improving upon plans made by inventors in the 17th century.

Not only was Monturiol a talented scientist, he was also a political radical, whose ideas for safety for the working class gave him the motivation to invent his submarine.

Born in 1819, Monturiol was the son of a cooper and eventually got a law degree in 1845. Though he never practiced, he got seriously involved in progressive causes, writing pamphlets promoting feminism, pacifism, and utopian communes. He also was the founding editor of the feminist newspaper La Madre de Familia and La Fraternidad, Spain’s first communist newspaper.

While living in Cadaqués, he witnessed the death of a coral harvester by drowning and came away determined to improve the safety conditions for these workers. That led him to work on building a working submarine.

IctineoI (a word combining the Greek words for fish and ship), is the first submarine he built, and it launched on June 28, 1859, in the Barcelona harbor. Made of olive wood and reinforced with rings of copper 2 mm thick, the craft was only about 23 feet long and run by a crew of four people. During its test run, Ictineo I plummeted to the depths of only 20 meters, and ran into some pilings that cause it to be damaged. Throughout the summer, this submarine went through a series of 20 more test dives, and although it could successfully move underwater, the submarine was too slow (mainly because it was moved by human power). That sub was accidentally destroyed when a cargo ship ran into it while it was berthed.

That wasn’t the end of Monturiol’s underwater plans, however. With money raised from subscriptions to his company La Navegación Submarina, Ictineo II was built and launched on October 4, 1864. Instead of using human power, Monturiol invented a special chemically-driven engine coupled with a steam engine to propel the craft. This sub was able to dive 90 feet and stay underwater for as along as 7 1/2 hours. It was also advanced for its time by having an early form of an anaerobic (air-independent) propulsion system.

Although Ictineo II was very much a successful improvement upon the first, Monturiol was never able to use it to help his coral divers. The submarine ended up being seized by bank creditors in December 1867 and destroyed. Afterward, Monturiol never got the funds he needed to build any more subs, and his great technological advancement became lost to history until resurrected by the Germans during WWII.

Monturiol’s underwater legacy has been remembered since then. A model of Ictineo I stands at the entrance of the Marine Museum in Barcelona, and a replica of the Ictineo II was rebuilt in 1992 and is currently on display by the harbor.

4 responses to “#93 Narcís Monturiol’s Submarines Ictineo I and II”

It’s nice to see the spreading of Scientific History from Spain 🙂 Narcís Monturiol is one of my best favorite inventors.

I will like to state something about the names. On Wikipedias appear the spanish version, but Monturiol wasn’t called “Narciso”, maybe by spanish press, but its real name is “Narcís”. That’s like the horrible obsession of Spanish to call at Thomas Moore “Tomás Moro” and Jules Verne “Julio Verne”. Narcís Monturiol was Catalan, not only Spanish, and the real name is in catalan 🙂

By the way, maybe you can be interested that he was an important intellectual on the utopian socialism, which has a relationship with the optimistic science and technology, and the Romantic science. I will love to recommend a book from Santiago Riera i Tuèbols, but I think the editions are only on catalan.

And nowadays there are a very interesting project related with the Ictineos. Ictineu-3, to make a little submarine for deepest investigations, but they are trying to find cash via crowdfunding http://www.ictineu.net/empresa/index.php?lang=en

About Beyond Victoriana

The Nutshell ExplanationBeyond Victoriana is the oldest-running blog about multicultural steampunk and retro-futurism--that is, steampunk outside of a Western-dominant, Eurocentric framework. Founded in 2009, Beyond Victoriana focuses on non-Western cultures, underrepresented minorities in Western histories (Asian / Pacific Islander, Middle Eastern, First Nation, Hispanic, black / African & other marginalized identities), and the cultural intersection between the West and the non-West.